The stolen bag of gold
The moment I stepped in
the office I figured out something grave had happened. Biman was on his desk
with an extremely worried face. Kanak was silently weeping in front of him as
if he fell into some serious trouble. Bharat, the driver of our polio
surveillance unit stood up hurriedly from his seat when he saw me making my entry
into the office.
‘What happens?’ I asked them.
I was equally surprised
to see Kanak back. He left for Lucknow yesterday. How come he has returned so
early? Generally he comes back from Lucknow after 4 - 5 days. Why the hell the
fellow is breaking in so much of tears?
‘Sir, there is a big
problem.’ Biman’s comment carried a strong sense of concern.
‘What is that?’ I took my
seat by that time, ‘What happens to Kanak? Why is he back so early? Is
everything fine with him?’
‘Kanak has made a big
blunder, Sir.’ Biman gave his reply in a hopeless voice.
Kanak was hired to
transport the stool samples of the AFP (Acute Flaccid Paralysis) cases to our
regional laboratory located in Lucknow.
All stool samples
collected from the AFP cases are tested in the lab to know if those samples
have Wild Polio Virus (WPV) or not. If WPV is detected in the stool sample, the
paralysis is caused by polio, if not the paralysis is caused by diseases other
than polio.
WPV is responsible for
polio in children and causes permanent paralysis of their limbs. The paralysis
is incurable and irreversible. The affected child becomes crippled for the rest
of his/her lives. Polio is a disease without cure.
But the WPV can be
eradicated which means the deadly virus can be eliminated from the earth
forever. Most of the countries of the world exterminated polio from their soil
but few countries including India still harbour WPV. We are putting our best
efforts to eradicate polio from our country.
‘What blunder?’ I
exclaimed.
‘The box having the stool
container inside has been stolen from Kanak’s custody in the train.’ replied
Biman in utter dejection.
I was completely shocked.
‘But how? How could Kanak be so careless?’
‘That’s what I was
telling him Sir. He didn’t take proper care of the box in the train. Somebody
must have picked it up taking fully the advantage of his callousness.’
Kanak, all on a sudden,
started crying loudly, ‘Believe me Sir, I was always alert in the train. I was traveling
in the general compartment as I didn’t have reservation and somehow managed to
get a seat over there. The box was on my lap throughout. I dozed off in the journey
little bit. The box was picked up during that time. When I woke up I couldn’t
find it. I asked everyone in the compartment including a cop, but nobody was
able to give me any clue about the box.’
‘Stop crying Kanak. I very
well understand the trouble you had gone through.’ I intervened, then asked
Biman, ‘How many more days we have to collect the additional samples of stool
from that paralytic child? Biman, would you please find out?’
‘Sir, our bag of gold is stolen. It is an
irreparable loss. I don’t think we have much time left to collect the
additional stool samples. Please let me check from the case investigation
report of the child.’ Biman sounded absolutely frustrated.
Bag of gold. That’s exactly what we refer to the stool samples that are
collected from the paralytic children in the polio eradication project.
Polio is a disease where
a child develops sudden onset paralysis of his/her lower limbs (sometimes,
upper limbs as well). Interestingly the paralysis is a loose one and the
crippled limb hangs from the body like a dead branch of the tree. We have a
special name for this kind of paralysis – Acute Flaccid Paralysis or AFP. Polio
affects mainly smaller children, but sometimes it doesn’t even spare the older
lots.
The Wild Polio Virus
(WPV), that we mentioned in the earlier part of the story enters into the human
body through contaminated food and water, subsequently sails into the gut,
multiplies in millions and finally gets out of the body through the stool. A
polio affected child discharges WPV in maximum number in his/her stool during
the period of the first two weeks from the onset of the paralysis. If you
collect the stool samples of the paralytic child particularly during that time
and test it, there is maximum chance of detecting the virus in the stool and
thereafter, you can easily confirm your diagnosis of polio in the paralytic
child. In case the same stool sample doesn’t show any trace of WPV in it, you
can confidently say the child has developed paralysis due to some other illnesses
but not due to polio.
So, timely collection of
stool, that is within two weeks of the start of paralysis in the AFP-affected child
is the most important thing to confirm if the child’s paralysis is caused by
polio or not.
Sometimes, due to delayed
reporting of the paralytic child, his/her stool sample can’t be collected within
that two weeks’ deadline. That reduces the chances of detecting the virus in
the stool of the paralytic child, as the excretion of virus in the stool
drastically lessens after the deadline of two weeks.
The golden rule of polio eradication
project says, ‘Search extensively for all the AFP affected children in the
community, detect them early, preferably soon after the start of their
paralysis, collect their stool samples by all means within the two weeks’
deadline, and ensure in this way that you haven’t missed to diagnose a polio
affected child in your area.’
This vigilance work of
detecting the AFP cases in the community is the most crucial thing in the polio
eradication project. In public health
terminology we call it polio surveillance. Missing an AFP affected child and
subsequently failing to collect his/her stool samples during the period of
first two weeks after the start of paralysis denotes you are not sufficiently
alert in your AFP vigilance activities. That further means, we fail to know
which AFP case is due to polio, which is not.
Without a sensitive
vigilance system of timely AFP case detection and stool collection, polio
eradication efforts remain weak and ineffective.
Our bags of gold were
collected on 6th and 8th day of the paralytic onset of
the child. We further calculated from the case history of the same child that
today was actually the 11th day, and we have only 3 days left to collect the
additional samples of stool to keep the case within the parameter of ‘timely
reported’ category.
I cancelled all my
routine activities and rushed to the village of the child to collect the stool
samples. The child’s residence was in the remote village of Banmankhi block. When
we reached the house a big surprise was waiting for us over there.
The child had been
already transferred to her Nani’s
(maternal grandmother) place in Bhawanipur block. We noted down the address of
the Nani’s village and made immediate
move towards the new place.
Crime, big and small is a
common event in Bhawanipur block. We were repeatedly told by the block
officials not to travel in the block, especially after the sunset.
But we were desperate to
collect our ‘bag of gold’. We had no
option left.
We reached Bhawanipur in the late afternoon.
The route connecting Banmankhi with Bhawanipur blocks was tortuous with a horrific
strip of road filled with innumerable pits of various sizes that consumed a lot
of our precious time.
The next challenging task
in Bhowanipur was to locate the exact place where child is currently residing
and reach there at the earliest.
We took the help of the
local Primary Health Centre (PHC) of Bhowanipur. The Medical Officer of the PHC
Dr R.P.Singh was gem of a person. The moment he heard our tragic story of
stolen ‘stolen gold’ he took no time
to jump into our jeep to accompany us in the most daring ‘stool collection
mission’. He took with us his right hand man of the PHC, Mr Arjun Mishra, one
of the Health Educators. Arjun Mishra knew every nook and corner of the block like
the palm of his hand. Being a seasoned local man he was also a safe guard
against any possible criminal threat en route.
Thereafter, we landed
into the problem number three.
Polio virus is a funny
virus. It can only survive in very low temperature. Slight increase of
temperature in its environment can destroy the virus in no time. After
collection, the stool samples should be kept inside the frozen ice so that the virus,
if present in the stool samples can remain viable there. The stool samples are
sent to the lab with adequate and proper ice packing to keep the required
temperature intact throughout the shipment process.
Whenever we go out to the
field to collect our ‘bag of gold’ we
always carry a vaccine carrier with four frozen ice-pack inside. After
collection the stool containers with the stool samples inside are placed within
the inner space of the vaccine carrier that is surrounded by the four ice-packs
and brought to our polio field office; there after transferred immediately to
the deep freezer of the office and kept till they are transported to the regional
lab for testing to detect the wild polio virus in the samples.
If your air conditioning
system for the ‘bag of gold’ is not
proper, your gold might not remain gold till the end, channelizing all your
hard efforts into the water.
It was middle of the
summer. When we checked our ice-packs they were half melted. The chances of
replacing them with frozen ice packs from the Bhowanipur PHC were bleak.
There is a need of uninterrupted
electric supply to freeze the ice-packs adequately inside the refrigerator. But
that always remained a dream in a place where power cut for hours was the most
common phenomena.
Dr RP Singh had finally come
out with a solution of the acute problem. We stopped the jeep at a rural
ice-cream factory on the way and bought a big chunk of ice to fill up the
vaccine carriers to freeze our half-melted ice-packs.
We reached the village on
the verge of the sunset and somehow managed to locate the child’s house with
the help of some kind hearted villagers.
Fortunately, the child
was present in the Nani’s house with
her mother.
‘We have to hurry up a
little bit.’ Arjun Mishra put an instantaneous alert on us, ‘the place is not
safe after the evening.’
And then emerged the
challenge number four of the day.
The mother informed us
the child has become severely constipated, so ready stool sample is very
unlikely. We need to wait. But how long?
‘Give the child some milk
and biscuits. That can produce some stool.’ suggested Dr RP Singh.
‘The child is not taking
her food properly since her illness.’ complained the mother. She had already
been giving us frequent suspicious looks by that time.
‘Why these guys are so much after my child’s stool?’
How did the poor woman
know that it was not stool but the bag of
gold for us?
Worries were clouding in
Arjun Mishra’s face with time. He was much more concerned about our safety than
collecting stool from a constipated child.
The child was given milk
and biscuits but she refused them on the spot. All attempts to feed her had
miserably failed.
I suddenly remembered my
jeep has a flatus tube which can be used to collect stool from a constipated
paralytic child. Bharat immediately brought the tube.
We told the mother that
we would make the child pass stool with this tube which will be inserted in her
anus. Her suspicion became deeper and she refused our proposal straightway.
‘Let me try with my
little finger.’ Dr RP Singh again came forward to suggest another option to get
out of this unexpected crisis.
He convinced the Nani (maternal grandmother) first and
thereafter the mother and other members of the family.
When the child passed
stool, it was half past eight. My happiness knew no bounds irrespective of Arjun’s
Mishra’s repeated words of caution, ‘We are very much late Sir. We must leave
now. This is not at all a safe area to travel at these hours.’
And we faced the fifth and
final challenge of the day, on our way back to Bhawanipur PHC.
After about fifteen
minutes of leaving the village with a successful ‘stool collection’ mission
under our belt, when we were enjoying the bumpy ride on the uneven and
constricted village road, about 10-15 masked horse-riders blocked our way. We
just couldn’t figure out how and wherefrom the bandits appeared so fast to stop
our jeep.
They were carrying guns,
and some of them were AK 47 – our jeep’s strong headlight made them clearly
visible.
‘That’s what I continuously
feared about.’ I heard Arjun Mishra’s fretted voice.
‘Don’t look at their eyes
when you talk to them and for God’s sake don’t argue with them if you really
value your life.’ cautioned Dr Singh.
One of the horse riders
waved his hand to tell us switch off the jeep’s headlight. Bharat helplessly
reciprocated.
Three of the horse riders
gradually neared our jeep. Their silhouettes looked no less than haunted
walking spirits under the clean moonlit sky. One of them pointed his finger at
us to get out of the jeep.
‘Are they going to shoot
us?’ I murmured.
‘I hope not.’ Dr Singh
pacified me.
When we disembarked, two
of the horse riders were already on the ground from their horses. I could see
their third companion targeting his gun at us on the horse. My heart almost
stopped that moment.
We were very much within
their firing range. It is just a matter of pressing the triggers of those
deadly killing machines to put the complete full stop to our lives.
‘Who are you and where
are you coming from?’ one of them asked harshly.
‘Let me handle them. None
of you should respond to their queries.’ mumbled Dr Singh once again.
‘We are from the polio
department. We went to the near- by village to see a paralytic child.’ he
replied in extreme politeness.
‘Search the jeep. If
anyone tries to play smart, don’t hesitate to shoot.’ instructed the same
person to his fellows.
Two of the men got into
the jeep. After sometime, they came out with the vaccine carrier which had our
most valuable ‘bag of gold’ inside.
I felt I was equally
worried about the most valuable stool sample which had been collected after a
whole day’s inhuman efforts.
‘What is there inside
this box?’ asked one of them.
‘Stool sample.’ replied
Dr Singh smoothly, ‘We collected from the paralytic child.’
‘Open the box.’
Dr Singh looked at me,
smiled and knelt down to open the box.
‘Please have a look
inside.’ he told the bandits after he opened the vaccine carrier.
One of them switched on
the torch to look into the vaccine carrier and took the stool container out.
‘What is this?’
‘This is the stool sample
as I told you about.’
The man immediately
dropped the container on the road. ‘Shit, its stool, damn it.’ he said in utter
disgust. His fellows burst into sudden laughter.
I immediately put the
container with stool sample back to the vaccine carrier. I just couldn’t afford
to lose my bag of gold once again.
‘Why there is so much of
ice inside your box?’ the man asked again.
Dr RP Singh gave the
bandits a small but solid lecture on polio, stool sample collection, two weeks’
deadline etc etc.
They were probably not
ready for a polio session like this.
‘Let them go. They are
harmless polio people.’ We heard him instructing his men.
We had a big sigh of
relief.
The rest of our journey
was eventless except a very special comment of our good friend Mr Arjun Mishra.
‘Sir, your stool sample
actually saved our lives today.’
‘Remember, we have to
collect one more sample of stool after 24 hours.’ I gave him a mild reminder.
‘No problem Sir,’ Arjun
got back to his usual enthusiastic mood once again, ‘We can take hundreds of
those samples now. Nobody will dare to touch us anymore.’
From the story-book 'Eradicators' by Sugata Mukhopadhyay